cover image: Disruption in regional housing: Policy responses for more resilient markets

Disruption in regional housing: Policy responses for more resilient markets

15 Jul 2024

These applications include the protection of the environment, the promotion of economic growth in places affected by adverse conditions, the building of social capital, addressing the challenges of inter-generational policy and improving the amenity of urban areas. [...] • By verifying the nature, extent and impact of the challenges facing the provision of housing in rural and regional housing markets, the project finds that many of these markets have been adversely affected by factors outside the control of local industry participants. [...] In their study of the housing conditions of families in the Riverland of South Australia and south-west Queensland, Burbidge and Winter (1995) argued that there were three aspects of housing disadvantage that were of substantial concern in non-metropolitan Australia: • first, the number of occupants in many homes and the associated incidence of overcrowding • second, dwelling quality – that is the. [...] 2.1 The quantitative classification The RAI has examined the performance of regional housing markets in a number of its publications (RAI 2022) and has linked housing to its broader set of policy concerns around population growth outside capital cities and the need to develop a workforce to meet the pressing needs of non-metropolitan industries with the capacity to grow. [...] In large measure the responses suggest that challenges already present in regional housing supply (such as adequacy of the labour force, the cost of inputs into the construction process and so on) were made worse by the pandemic: • 72 per cent of respondents gave a score of seven or higher when asked if the pandemic had exacerbated the shortage of workers in the building industry.
Pages
75
Published in
Australia

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